Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 198, 2 July 1917 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JULY 2, 19fi
PAGEC3VJ
BRITISH WOMAN ASKS SHARE IN EATOTESTATE Mrs. L. Josephson; of Lahcas- ' ter Believes She is Heiress to $60,000 Austin Estate. .
EATON, O., July 2. Clinging Persistently to the belief tat her mother wai Mn. Lola M. Alexander Of this city, who died a few months ago, lea. - lag: wealth estimated at $60,000, Mrs. L. Josephson, 46 Derby Road, Lancaster , Lanes., England, baa written Deputy Sheriff Joe D. Clear a second letter. She hope to establish her claim and share in the estate. The deceased, a daughter of the late Perry Alexander, of this city, was married to Abner CnurchiU, who practiced dentistry here several years. Shortly after their marriage they went to Indianapolis, where, it has been reported, a daughter, Edna Carnavan Churchill, - was born. Mr. and Mrs. said the child waa given unto the care of someone, whose identity is not ' gQwn. ' ' Nineteen Helra Claim Estate When Mrs. Austin's will waa admitted to probate and record, disposition of the estate was made, but no reference to a daughter ,wa given. Nine- - ter. aelr claim an interest Mrs. Jos-phon'S , letter to Deputy Sheriff Clear follows-: "I understand you forwarded me a letter upon the subject of Dr. and Mr. Churchill's missing daughter, but Unfortunately I never received it. I am not in a position to requisition the services of a solicitor and so inqulft Ing to know if a person without means can get a solicitor and counsel assigned to them free of charga upon presenting a petition as in England, or If any solicitor, would be likely to Uke my case upon the basis of no result ao chafse. s "I wish iu particular to find out the late Mrs. Austin's whereabouts in 1185, and if at all likely for her to have been in south France, also if she , had friends or relatives in England, particularly Trumbrldge. I under
stand you nave -Been searching ror Edna Cartiavan Churchill. One would favor the idea of her being taken
eventually out of the country, to have become so completely lost in spite of Dr. ChnrehW's unceasing search " Mrs, Josephson states she read of the search in a Scotch newspaper, and believes she is the daughter because of the fact that early in life she was known by the name of "Lola." Her age. too, strengthens her belief, for It corresponds to that of Mrs. Austin's daughter. Concluding her communication, Mrs. Josephson writes: "I hope you will assist me with the advice I desire, as you .will understand the difljculty I am experiencing In being so remote from the scene of action and the anxiety f'to establish- my identity. -The grief of my life has been not to have known my parents." . 1
! ELDORADO, OHIO Mr. and Mrs. George Beardwere in Hamilton Friday and Saturday. Mrs. Mary Rupe and daughter, Berneta, returned with them and remained until Tuesday.... Mr. and Mr. Perry Eby and children and Mr. and Mrs. ft. A. Miller and children visited with Mr. and Mri. Forrest I.nnknrk.
er of Ctrclthill, Sunday. ... .Mr. and Mrs. 'Samuel TJllom entertained at dinner Sunday, Mr. and - Mrs. Isaac . Miller and daughter Helen, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Shewman and daughter, Naomi, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schlientz, and Mr. and Mrs.. C. D. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. John' Klaig and daughters r.nd Mies Reigle of New Madison, and . Mrs. Estelia Flaig and grandchildren 1 of St. Paris were afternoon zuesta
Mr. and Mrs. George Beard and Mrs. Mary Rupe and daughter, Berneta, were Arcanum visitors Sunday evening ...crtay Campbell of Minnesota, visited. with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Campbell, from Monday until Thursday of last week:. .4. Mr. and
Mr?. Garfield Kimmel and Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Campbell visited with Jesse
Trump aud iarally of Castine, Sunday.
,Mr. and Mrs. John Nearon and Mr,
and Mrs. Lester Hspner and son Rob
ert, spent Sunday In the country with Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Hapner and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. George Beard enter
tatned at dinner Sunday, Mrs. Mary
Rupe and daughter Berneta, of Ham
ilton, and Mr. and Mrs. E. C, Shew-
mon Miss Iris Ford of Columbus
came Sunday to make an extended
, visit with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spit
ler and other friends in the community..... Mr. and Mrs. Anderson Disher
and. daughter, Mary, of Dexter, Mo., arrived last Wednesday of a short visit with bis parents, Mr. and Mrs.
F.van Disher. and other relatives..
Mr. and Mrs. warren McClure of
Richmond., spent Sunday afternoon
with his mother, Mrs. Martha Mc
Clure. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Dan Detro of
near Greenville, were entertained at
dinner Sunday, by Mr. and Mrs. Gil more McFaddin Dr. and Mrs. Geo Blackford entertained at dinner Sun-
t'av. Mr. Kiik Huffman and children,
Mildred, Helen and Robert of GreenMile, Rev. J. H. Blackford and daughter, Lenore, and Mrs. Elmira Coons. ....Miss Opal Shewmon and brother, Charles, of Dayton, are visiting with relatives and friends here Miss Dole McKee i spending a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Orla Kimmel and daughter, at the Eaton Children's Home.,;. Mr. and Mrs. John Rinehart and daughters and Theodore Allen, of West Sonora. were Sunday afternoon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spitler Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Beck and daughter, Mildred, entertained Sunday. "Mr. and Mrs. C. W, Bloom of New Paris. . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Swartsel and children of near Lewisburg, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blackford and children, and Mrs. Jane Swartzel md daughter. Mary.. ..Mr and Mrs. Gata Kyle and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stayton spent. Sunday at the Celina reservoir..., Mr. and Mrs. Clem McKee are in attendance at the .Ohio Universalist convention , In session at Attica. Ohio. . . . Prof. L. F. Schieser left lat Thursday " for Columbus, j where he ie attending school at the j State University. j
5 J KING- KHYBER RIFLES
?L i Romance ofjtfcfvGn iure
CorniiowT 1910 Ttv Tra Bmm-Wwiu Ca.
King led the way after him on foot, for even in the. Hills, where cruelty is
a virtue, a man may be excused, on
economic grounds, for showing mercy to his. beast. His men tugged the weary animals along behind him, through the gap under the arch and along an almost interminable, smelly maze of alleys whose sides were the walls of square stone towers, or sometimes pf mud-and-stone-walled compounds, and here and there of sheer, slab-sided cliff. At intervals they -came" to bolted narrow doors, that probably led up to overhead defenses. Net fifty yards of any alley was straight; not a yard but what was. commanded from overhead. Khfnjan had been rebuilt since its last destruction by some expert who knew all about street fighting. Like Old Jerusalem, the place could have contained a civil war of a hundred factions," and still have opposed stout resistance to an outside army, AUM gave on to courtyard, and filthy square to aldey.until unexpectedly at last "a seemiugly blind passage turned sharply and opened on a straight street, of fair width, and more than half a mile-long. It' is marked "Street of the Dwellings" on the secret army maps, and it has been burned so often by Khinjan rioters, as well as by expeditions out of India, that a man who goes on a long journey never expects to find it the same on his return ....
? It was lined on either hand , with moUey dwellings, out of which a mot-
4 Her crowd of people swarmed to stare
at King and his men. There were houses built of stolen corrugated iron that cursed, hot, hideous stuff that the West has inflicted on an all-too-wilJing East; others of wood-of stone of mud-of - mats -of slsine-r-even of tent-cloth. Most of them were filthy. A row of kites sat on the roof of one, and in the gutter near it three gorged vultures sat on the remains of a mule. . Scarcely a house was it to be defended, for Khinjan's fighting men all possess towers, that are plastered about the; everfrowning meun
tain like wasp nests on a wall. Theae were the sweepers, the traders, the loose women, toe mere penniless and the' more or ..less useful men-not Khinjan's inner guard by any means. There were Hindus sycophants, keepers ef aeeeunts and writers- - to the chiefs (since literacy is at a premium in these parts). In proof of Khinjan's eatholic taste and indiscriminate villainy, there were women of nearly every Indian breed and caste, many of them stolen into shameful slavery, but some of them there from choice. And there were little children little naked brats with round drum tummies, who squealed and shrilled and stared with bold eyes; some of them were pretending to be bandits on their own account already, and one flung a $tone that missed King by an inch.
AT MURRETTE WEDNESDAY
i ' 4 I
The Ti dcx . of Babncgat
LAXKY PABAMOUNT
9 f
k J9K ml wf
COOUNG SATISFACTION with
D POSTUM
A popular home drink that provide? hot-day comfort of the right sort--Directions: Postum madlc ia the usual way, chilled with toe, and served with sugar, and either , a dash of lemon or t ream to taste.
1
The
double-service tooth Daste. ,
-A keeps teeth clean AND GUMS HEALTHY.
' Keeping the gums healthy and the mouth sweet is very important to health ; more teeth are lost through the loosening of the tissue that holds the teeth in place than from decay. Dental science to-day demands that tooth paste must keep the gums healthy as well as clean the teeth. Senreco was formulated to meet this requirement. Hundreds of den tlstt are prescribing and using Senreco because they have found that it does measure up to that standard. . .. . SENRECO IS A WONDERFUL CLEANSER. In addition to its remedial properties Senreco is wonderful cleanser; acts directly on the mucin film, the basis of tartar; leaves the mouth cool and clean-feeling. As some one has expressed it Senreco gives one a new idea on mouth cleanliness. Get a tube today at your druggists or toilet counter enjoy the healthy, cleanly feeling its use gives your mouth and gums. Notice bow brilliantly white Senreco makes your teeth. It performs this two-fold service for you and yet costs no more than the ordinary, old-ioshioned tooth paste that simply cleans the teeth and leaves a pleasant teste 25 cents for a large ' I ounce tube. . '
The stone fell in the gutter, on the far side and started I a fight among the mangy street curs, which proved a diversion and probably saved King's party from more accurate attentions. Perhaps a thousand eouls cam out to . watch, all . told. " Not an eye of them missed the government marks on King's trappings, of the government brand on the mules, and after
a r minute or two, when the proces
sion was half-way down the street, a man reproved : the child who had thrown a stone, and he was backed up by the others. They classified King correctly, exactly as he meant they should. As a hakim a man of medicinehe could fill a long-felt want; but by the brand on his accouterments he walked sn openly avowed robber, and that made him a brother In crime. Somebody cuffed the next child who picked up a stone. He knew the street of old, although it had changed perhaps a dozen times since he had seen it. It was a cul-de-gac, and at the end of it, just as on his previous visit, there stood a stone mosque, whose roof leaned back at a
steep angle against the mountain-side. The fact that it was a mosque, and that it was the only building used as such in Khinjan, had saved it from being leveled to the ground by the last British expedition. " . It waa a famous mosque in its way.
for the bed-sheet of the Prophet is known to hang in it, preserved against the ravages of time and the touch of Infidels by priceless Afghan rugs before and behind, so that it hangs lige a great thin sandwich before the rear stone waU. f King had seen it. Very vividly he recalled his almost exposure by a suspicious mullah, when he had crept nearer to examine it at close range. For the Secret Service must probe all things. There bad been an attempt since his last visit to make the mosque's exterior look more in keeping with the building's use. It was cleaner. It had been smeared with whitewash. 4 platform had been built on the roof
Woman Buys Boyd; Employer Slaps iHer And Lands .. In Jail SIOUX CITY, La., July 2. Joe Sanders, proprietor of the Crystal Lake hotel, was arrested iq Dakota cipunty, Neb., recently, on a warrant charging Mm with assault with intent up dp great bodily harm on Frances AjAUey, who told federal authorities Saiiders
beat her because she bought Liberty
Loan bonds. .
The arrest was brought about by
Gorge Learner, county attorney of Dakota county, who investigated the Regress story after she had complairted to the government authorities. According to the story Prances Ashley told Mr, Learner. Sanders grew angry at her when he learned she had purchased a Liberty bond and slapped
her. Sanders declares the woman was
working for him and became negligent-,
When he discharged her he said she
refused to leave the hotel, and he eject
ed her. He denies striking her, and also brands as false -her charge that he was angry because she tried to help tlie United States finance the war.
THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT Sunshine softens sorrow, so smile. Tou have two ears and two yes, but you have only on mouth. Use each In its right proportion. If you ere over looking to other men and other businesses to see how much you should be doing, by comparison, then other men and other businesses will never look to you. Blaze the trail. Just a few lines in The Palladium Want Ad columns tomorrow may start you successward aggressively by getting you a better position. Talk with a Palladium Want Ad Taker. Phone 2834.
Night" Many boxes have bees! served and no doubt the elite of H
mond will be in attendance. -
CLIFFORD VAN AUSDALL JOIN AMERICAN AMBULANCE CO!
EATON, O., July 2. The dlsapi
ance of Clifford Van Auedall,
Albert Van Ausdall, of Dixon towns was cleared up when the fathes
ceived a letter sayins that he bad
listed in an ambulaac corns., ail
stationed at Jefferson barracks,
Ice-Mint Fine For i Tired, Burning Feet) Wonderful Relief for Sere. Aching, ! Tender Feet, Painful Corns '
Calluses.- j
what a relief. How cool. eay and comfortable It maV them feel. Coder the BVotblar, cooling- influence of Ico-Miat. corns and painful callusee stop hurting and you will waat to danc for Joy. No humbug. Jurt try Ice-Mint cnc. It will malt your poor old tired fee 1 feel so cool, easy and comfortable that you will Juat sigh with relief. Corns and painful caUnses are atcangers to the frleada ol loo-Mint.
for the muezzin. But it still looked more like a fort than a place of worship. Toward it the one-eyed ruffian led the way, with the long, leisurelyseeming gait of a mountaineer. At the door, in the middle of the end of the street, he paused and struck on the lintel three times with his gunbutt. And that was a strange proceeding, to say the least, in a land where the mosque is public resting place for homeless ones, and all the "faithful" have a right to enter. To be continued
On The Boards
1 The Otis Oliver Players will ' offer ftie popular book play "Lena Rivers" a5 the Murray this evening, with a souvenir photo matinee Tuesday and a holiday matinee the Fourth of July. An elaborate production has been patnted tor this play and by the way the rehearsals are progressing "Lena Risers" will be the banner play of thei engagement. Numerous requests forta society night have been received by She managements so in the future Moiaday will be known as "Society
The Real "Wa: Bread" must contain tb entire wheat grain not tfa white flour center be every particle of gluten an mineral salts ajao the oott bran coat that is so useful i keeping the bowels health; and active. Shrrf-?i7to Phcrct is the real "wa bread" because it is 100 pa cent, whole wheat prepcrq in a digestible farm. Cos tains no yeast, baking povs der, seasoning, orchemicc of any kind. Foodconserva tion begins with Shreddo Wheat Biscuit for breal
fast and ends with Shreddr?
Wheat Biscuit for euppe: Delicious with sliced bdrsrj nas, berries, or other, fruit I Made at Niaerara Falls. N.V
It a clntn. creamy.' snow-white substaara whose medicinal qualities come froni thj t'.owy . fields Of oldf Japat) where the people bare the best cared-for little feet on earth. o matter what yau have tried, or how many tunes you have boon disappointed, you will Ice-Mint brines. Ask at any Drug Store to-day for a small frr of Ice-Mint ana give your poor. cnfTeHno. '-t. ablDf. burning feet the treat of their iUca. Yuli like t lixuaenely. .
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
Special Notice !
Our usual custom of giving our employes a half holiday each Thursday during the hot months of July and August, Begins Thursday, July 5th
rt
Our Store will be closed atf 1 p. m. on Thursdays During These Months. Do your trading in the morning on Thursdays, thereby you will greatly assist us in giving our employes this half hipliday. j Yours for service !
Richmond's Daylight Store
1i
r
Clean Sweep
E
99
FopMic Week off One "IFoiuiPttlhi
To show our appreciation of the way so many have taken advantage of our CleanSweep Shoe Sale, we have placed a number of our shoes in a 4th of July Special List. If you haven't supplied your wants with the good, dependable shoes for the present and fall, you had better come in and take advantage of these 4th of Jury Specials.
$5.50 Tan English Sport Oxford, ivory sole, rubber heel and Neolin sole, this week special fj Young Men's Extreme Eng
lish Oxfords in black or
tan; $6.50 grade for"".".... .....
$4.95
All of our $4.50 and $5.00 U9i ao 3piq 'spaojxo $3.45 Queen Quality White Pump in a real dress last this week's special Q) at . . .". -"
White Sport Caddy Pump low heel, white sole, dJO A C this week special , . MuW
White Sport, Lace Shoesand white soles, special at
-Rubber heel $2.95
All of our $5.50 Slippers and Pumps put in one grand, big class, to close $9 QC out thisvweek; the price. titJ
All of our $4.50 and $5.00 Slippers; this week's special
Pumps, and $3.45
Any Ladies' Pump, Slipper or Shoe on the bargain table, $2.50 and M fA
$3.50 value, choice for
TAvk fed
7
807 MAIN STREET
SUCCESSORS TO CUTflOIiGHAM
t3
fallAoium want
-1
